OK SO LIKE I HAVE VAULTING FOR OVER A YEAR AT MY SKOOL AND I HAVE A PRETTY DECENT PLANT AND MY ARMS ARE LIKE PERFECT AS MY CHOACH WOULD SAY, BUT THAT NOT THE POINT....ANYWAYS WHEN I LEVAE THE GROUND I TEND TO START OF WITH A GOOD STRAIT TRAIL LEG BUT THE NEXT THING I NO IT ITS GET TUCKED. SO MY SWING HAS GOTEN BETTER BUT DOES ANYONE HAVE ANYADICE ON HOW TO KEEP THAT TRAIL LEG FROM NOT TUCKING??????
I TRY TO NOT TUCK IT BUT ALMOST EVERY VAULT I DO...ITS KINDA ANNOING
SOO CAN SOMEONE GIVE MY AND POINTERS????
need some advice
- RBvaulter17
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need some advice
TAKE LIFE BY THE POLE!!!!!
- RBvaulter17
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- sooch90
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Well, I learned to keep my trail leg straight after take off just by... keeping it straight lol. I mean, before people told me to "try and keep the trail leg back", but I couldn't do it when they told me that. Then I just tried keeping it straight and extending it, and I got a better swing.
It sorta seems that on the forum, tucking is condemned, but I'm starting to wonder what are the benefits of tucking? Suppose someone can't get his feet up in time to invert and take advantage of the recoiling pole, should he try to adopt a tuck and shoot method?
It sorta seems that on the forum, tucking is condemned, but I'm starting to wonder what are the benefits of tucking? Suppose someone can't get his feet up in time to invert and take advantage of the recoiling pole, should he try to adopt a tuck and shoot method?
sooch90 wrote:Well, I learned to keep my trail leg straight after take off just by... keeping it straight lol. I mean, before people told me to "try and keep the trail leg back", but I couldn't do it when they told me that. Then I just tried keeping it straight and extending it, and I got a better swing.
It sorta seems that on the forum, tucking is condemned, but I'm starting to wonder what are the benefits of tucking? Suppose someone can't get his feet up in time to invert and take advantage of the recoiling pole, should he try to adopt a tuck and shoot method?
all it is is timing....if you keep your trail leg to parralel thats as far as you need it to go to keep enough pressure on the pole....after that it doesnt matter its jjust a personal choice on how it feels or which one is easier
pain is only temporary victory is forever
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- sooch90
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nitro wrote:sooch90 wrote:Well, I learned to keep my trail leg straight after take off just by... keeping it straight lol. I mean, before people told me to "try and keep the trail leg back", but I couldn't do it when they told me that. Then I just tried keeping it straight and extending it, and I got a better swing.
It sorta seems that on the forum, tucking is condemned, but I'm starting to wonder what are the benefits of tucking? Suppose someone can't get his feet up in time to invert and take advantage of the recoiling pole, should he try to adopt a tuck and shoot method?
all it is is timing....if you keep your trail leg to parralel thats as far as you need it to go to keep enough pressure on the pole....after that it doesnt matter its jjust a personal choice on how it feels or which one is easier
Parrallel to what? The runway? the pole?
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